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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
WIMIN'S WORK, by WINIFRED VIRGINIA JACKSON Poem Explanation Poet's Biography First Line: She wan't like ede er kate er them Last Line: Up ter the day she died. Subject(s): African Americans - Women | |||
She wan't like Ede er Kate er them, With pith and thigh fer work From one week's end ter 't'other, though There wan't a thing she'd shirk If it wuz wimin's work; an', fit er not, She made no blat An' that we knowed; but, John wan't one Ter let it go at that. Daise come from over Slab Hill way Where John bought most of his sheep Of old Jed Dunn, an', courtin' her, He 'umored her a heap; But when John brung her hum he sot Ter break her in ter do The outdoor chores that Hen had done, Though 't'wan't much pay Hen drew, Him bein' let out by the 'Squire Ter help along the School, -- Hen bein' on the town fer alms An more'n half a fool; -- So, Daise, she told John how it wuz: 'T'wuz wimin's work ter bake; Ter wash an' iron; scrub an' mend; An' hayin' time she'd rake An' milk; an' take the biddies on An' tend the lambs an' calves The whole year round, fer men ware rough An' tended them by halves; But fence rails he would hev ter drag; An' he would hev ter lug The water; cut an' haul the wood; An' rocks she wouldn't tug Fer clearin' ner fer mendin' walls. Daise sot ter make things plain Ter John, who'd yoked his temper ter A nut-gall crossed in grain. Then old Ed's Boy, he told a tale As how John licked of Daise; John held Daise by her yaller hair An' holler'd fit ter craze! M's Bartlett, hearin' of the talk, Decided she would go Avisitin' of John an' Daise -- Git what there wuz ter know! But, John, he gaff'd an' scratch'd fer Daise Like a rooster fer his hen, An' said of Grace, an' prayed at night An' read a Chapter then. An' when M's Bartlett went, John driv' Her hum, as nice as pie, An' asked her would she come agin -- She said she thought she'd fly! Then vapors got aholt of Daise: 'Twuz when the hay was cut An' John had men ahayin' there An' driv her like a slut. She claimed the pointed firs that run On round the Upper Field Stood there like sentinels by day, But riz at dusk an' reeled All night aback an' for'ards, like A whip wuz on their backs; That screech owls ware but poor lost souls The devil toused on racks; An' things like that; an' then she took The notion God let fall A seed an' made of her a flower That waited of His call. An', John, he couldn't make her budge, -- Though Sade said that he tried, An' Luke did, tew, who worked fer him, -- Up ter the day she died. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BLACK WOMAN by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON FOREDOOM by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON WHO SAID IT WAS SIMPLE by AUDRE LORDE ELIZABETH KECKLEY: 30 YEARS A SLAVE AND 4 YEARS IN THE WHITE HOUSE by E. ETHELBERT MILLER ON DIVERSE DEVIATIONS by MAYA ANGELOU HYMN FOR LANIE POO by AMIRI BARAKA THE DREAM SONGS: 68 by JOHN BERRYMAN A WITCH'S DAUGHTER AND A COBBLER'S SON by WINIFRED VIRGINIA JACKSON |
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